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Test your basic knowledge |
Skeletal System
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
health-sciences
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Mature bone cells located in lacunae.
Condyle
External Acoustic Meatus
Osteocytes
Meniscus
2. The visceral bone in the snout of swine that strengthens it for the rooting behavior of pigs.
Stifle Joint
Os Rostri
Cranium
Fossa
3. A skull bone that is one of the internal bones of the cranium; forms the floor of the cranium and contains the pituitary fossa - a depressin that houses the pituitary gland.
Fabellae
Tympanic Membrane
Pelvic Symphysis
Sphenoid Bone
4. One of two bones (the radius is the other) that form the antebrachium - or forearm; forms a major portion of the elbow joint with the distal end of the humerus.
Pelvic Limb
Ulna
Mandibular Symphysis
Fetlock Joint
5. The group of vertebrae located dorsal to the thoracic region; noted for their tall dorsal spinous processes.
Foramen Magnum
Transverse Processes
Thoracic Vertebrae
Bones of the cranium
6. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; also known as the nasal conchae. Four thin - scroll - like bones that fill most of the space in the nasal cavity.
Turbinates
Maxillary Bones
Sutures
Vertebra
7. A skull bone; an internal bone of the cranium. This single bone is located just rostral to the sphenoid bone and contains the cribriform plate.
Mandible
Facet
Callus
Ethmoid Bone
8. The smooth joint surface of a bone that contacts another bone in a synovial joint.
Ethmoid Bone
Appendicular Skeleton
Articular Surface
Neck
9. The junction between two bones; can be completely immovable (fibrous) - slightly movable (cartilaginous) or freely movable (synovial).
Joint
Obturator Foramina
Thoracic Limb
Joint Capsule
10. The bony roof of the mouth; the division between the mouth and the nasal cavity. Made up of portions of the maxillary and palatine bones.
Hard Palate
Calcitonin
Antebrachium
Ungual Process
11. The joint composed of the carpal bones; referred to as the 'knee' of the horse and the 'wrist' of humans.
Cancellous Bone
Carpus
Spinous Process
Sphenoid Sinus
12. The joint movement whereby an extremity is moved toward the median plane.
Adduction
Haversian Canal
Incisive Bones
Flat Bone
13. The hormone secreted by the parathyroid gland that prevents the level of calcium in the blood from getting too low.
Parathyroid Hormone
Paranasal Sinus
Incus
Phalanx
14. The main growth area of a bone developing by endochondral method; areas of bone development that are located in the main portions of the cartilage rod bone templates in the developing fetus.
Vertebral Column
Fetlock Joint
Diaphysis
Primary Growth Center
15. The sievelike area of the ethmoid bone through which the many branches of the olfactory nerve pass from the upper portion of the nasal cavity to the olfactory bulbs of the brain.
Cribriform Plate
Red Bone Marrow
Endochondral Bone Formation
Pterygoid Bones
16. Skull bones that are the bones of the ear; three pair of bones in the middle ear that transmit sound wave vibrations from the tympanic membrane to the inner ear.
Ossicles
Dens
Cartilaginous Joints
Sutures
17. The outer layer of a bone that is composed of compact bone.
Transverse Processes
Bone Cortex
Floating Rib
Fossa
18. A freely movable synovial joint.
Occipital Bone
Diarthrosis
Epiphysis
Bone Cortex
19. The main - weight - bearing bone of the lower leg; forms the stifle joint with the femur proximal to it and the hock with the tarsus distal to it.
Pterygoid Bones
Metacarpal Bones
Tibia
Ataxia
20. The kneecap; the largest sesamoid bone in the body; located on the front surface of the stifle joint in the tendon of the large quadriceps femoris muscle. It rides in the trochlea of the femur.
Mandible
Ethmoid Sinus
Atlas
Patella
21. Long - faced. Example: Collie.
Dolichocephalic
Cornual Process
Appendicular Skeleton
Ossification
22. A general name for a lump - bump - or other projection on a bone; can be articular processes or nonarticular processes - which are usually sites where tendons attach.
Articular Surface
Process
Fabellae
Nasal Septum
23. The lay term for the most proximal joint of the equine digit - which is the joint between the large metacarpal or metatarsal and the proximal phalanx. The proximal sesamoid bones are located on the caudal surface of this joint.
Metacarpal Bones
Fetlock Joint
Atlas
Anconeal Process
24. A ball - and - socket joint - such as the shoulder or hip joint. Capable of all synovial joint motions.
Short Bones
External Acoustic Meatus
Spheroidal Joint
Paranasal Sinus
25. A skull bone that is one of the external bones of the cranium; the caudal - most bone of the skull that forms the atlanto - occipital joint with the first cervical vertebra through the occipital condyles. The large foramen magnum in the occipital bon
Hock
Carpus
Bone Cortex
Occipital Bone
26. The group of vertebrae located dorsal to the abdominal region.
Lumbar Vertebrae
External Acoustic Meatus
Sacroiliac Joint
Phalanx
27. Bones formed in the soft organs (viscera); examples include the os penis - the os cordis - and the os rostri.
Circumduction
Visceral Skeleton
Splint Bones
Tarsus
28. Small cavities within the matrix of some connective tissues - such as cartilage and bone - within which cells are contained.
Intervertebral Disk
Intramembranous Bone Formation
Lacunae
Interparietal Bones
29. The healing tissue between the ends of a fractured bone that is eventually replaced by true bone as the fracture heals.
Sutures
Callus
Epiphyseal Growth Plate
Maxillary Bones
30. The bones of the tarsus - consisting of two rows of short bones located between the distal ends of the tibia and fibula and the proximal ends of the metatarsal bones.
Asternal Ribs
Ethmoid Bone
Tarsal Bones
Stifle Joint
31. A space within a skull bone that is an outpouching of a nasal cavity; depending on the species - these are found within the frontal bones - maxillary bones - sphenoid bones - and ethmoid bones.
Pivot Joint
Olecranon Process
Paranasal Sinus
Joint Capsule
32. The cartilaginous disk located between the bodies of adjacent vertebrae; acts as a shock absorber for the vertebrae.
Shaft
Stapes
Intervertebral Disk
Primary Growth Center
33. The area of a bone that joins the head with the main portion of the bone.
Neck
Endosteum
Ribs
Volkmann's Canals
34. Membrane bone formation; the type of bone formation that occurs only in certain skull bones when bone froms in the fibrous tissue membranes that cover the brain of the developing fetus.
Fibrous Joint
Intramembranous Bone Formation
Joint Space
Patella
35. The end of a long bone; each long bone has a proximal and distal _____.
Sternal Ribs
Epiphysis
Volkmann's Canals
Manubrium
36. The hematopoietic type of bone marrow.
Frontal Sinus
Red Bone Marrow
Amphiarthroses
Synovial Fluid
37. A skull bone; one of the external bones of the face. It is the lower jaw - the only movable skull bone - and contains all of the lower teeth.
Lumbar Vertebrae
Sutures
Occipital Bone
Mandible
38. Skull bones that are external bones of the cranium; form the lateral walls of the cranium - contain the middle and inner ear structures - and are the skull bones that form the temporomandibular joints with the mandible.
Joint
Temporal Bones
Fibula
Lumbar Vertebrae
39. The most caudal of the three pairs of bones that make up the pelvis.
Ossification
Hinge Joint
Ischium
Carpus
40. The visceral bone in the heart of cattle that helps support the valves of the heart.
Secondary Growth Center
Ethmoid Bone
Os Cordis
Process
41. The fibrous membrane that lines the hollow interiors of bones.
Head
Cranium
Sacrum
Endosteum
42. The socket portion of the ball - and - socket hip joint; it is formed at the junction of the ilium - ischium - and pubic bones of the pelvis.
Thoracic Limb
Acetabulum
Visceral Skeleton
Synovial Joint
43. The eardrum; a paper - thin connective tissue membrane that stretches across the opening of the external ear canal into the middle ear.
Tympanic Membrane
Epiphysis
Hock
Condyle
44. A pair of large holes in the pelvis located on either side of the pubic symphysis; the role seems to be to lighten the pelvis because no large nerves or vessels pass through them.
Glenoid Cavity
Bones of the cranium
Pelvis
Obturator Foramina
45. One of the irregular bones of the spinal column.
Ulna
Vertebra
Arthrodial Joint
Ethmoid Bone
46. The second cervical vertebra; it forms the atlantoaxial joint with the first cervical vertebra - the atlas.
Periosteum
Hinge Joint
Axis
Olecranon Process
47. Skull bones that are part of the internal bones of the face; make up the caudal portion of the hard palate.
Palatine Bones
Adduction
Manubrium
Fossa
48. A skull bone that is one of the internal bones of the face; forms part of the nasal septum.
Sternum
Thoracic Limb
Vomer Bone
Fibula
49. Ankle joint or tarsus; joins the tibiotarsus and the tarsometatarsus.
Synarthrosis
Hock
Joint
Adduction
50. The last - most caudal sternebra; the _____ process.
Temporomandibular Joint
Haversian System
Xiphoid
Articular Cartilage